The 6 Comprehension Strategies Every Reader Must Learn

Kids’ thinking matters. When students begin to understand that their thinking matters, reading changes. Throughout the school day, kids are actively questioning, discussing, arguing, debating, responding, and generating new knowledge. We can’t read kids’ minds, but one way to open a window into their understanding is to help them bring their thinking to the surface by talking and writing about it.

The Primary and Intermediate Comprehension Toolkits emphasize responsive teaching with lessons that explicitly teach the language of thinking. With this metacognitive scaffolding, teachers are able to gradually release to kids the responsibility for comprehending the wide variety of nonfiction texts they encounter. Toolkit lessons strengthen the specific kinds of thinking proficient readers use: six comprehension strategies that research has shown are part of an effective reader’s mental toolkit. The Comprehension Toolkit guides you through the explicit instruction of these six comprehension strategies:

Monitor Comprehension When readers monitor their comprehension, they keep track of their thinking as they read, listen, and view. They notice when a text makes sense or when it doesn’t. They distinguish between what the text is about and what it makes them think about. Only when they are “thinking about their thinking” can they make sense of what they read and also recognize when meaning has gone astray.

Activate and Connect Whether we are connecting, questioning, or inferring, background knowledge is the foundation of thinking. Readers can’t understand what they hear, read, or view without thinking about what they already know. To comprehend, learners must connect the new to the known. Kids must be prepared not only to think about what they already know but also to revise their thinking when they encounter new and more accurate information.

Ask Questions Curiosity is at the heart of teaching and learning. Questions spur curious minds to investigate. Questions open the doors to understanding the world. As readers try to answer their questions, they discover new information and gain knowledge. To develop as critical thinkers, kids must be taught to think about and question what they listen to, read, and view. Questioning is the strategy that propels learners forward.

Infer and Visualize Inferring is the bedrock of understanding. It involves taking what you know—your background knowledge—and merging it with clues in the text to come up with ideas and information that aren’t explicitly stated. Inferential thinking helps readers to figure out unfamiliar words, draw conclusions, develop interpretations, make predictions, surface themes, and even create mental images. Visualizing is sort of a first cousin to inferring. When readers visualize, they construct meaning by creating mental images, seeing, hearing, tasting, touching, and even smelling in their imaginations. Inferring and visualizing enable kids to get a deeper, more robust reading of the text.

Determine Importance For too many years, kids have been asked to pick out “the main idea” without being shown how or explaining why. Once kids know how to merge their thinking with the information, they need to be able to figure out what makes sense to remember. No one can or should remember every fact or piece of information read. Instead, readers need to focus on important information and merge it with what they already know to expand their understanding of a topic. Kids need to be shown a way to use information to develop a line of thinking as they read, surfacing and focusing their attention on important ideas in the text.

Summarize and Synthesize Synthesizing information nudges readers to see the bigger picture as they read. Thoughtful readers integrate the new information with their existing knowledge to come to a complete understanding of the text. As readers encounter new information, their thinking evolves. They merge the new information with what they already know and construct meaning as they go. As they distill nonfiction text into a few important ideas, they may develop a new perspective or an original insight.

Grounded in research and proven in practice, the Comprehension Toolkits guide you in the explicit instruction of these strategies, and situates them within the six effective teaching practices to foster comprehension: